Program Eight - Outline Eight

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"What must have been a dream"
I. Nineteenth-century fiction

A. National literature

1. American subjects

2. American style

3. American myths

B. Romanticism (see additional information)

C. Examination of American "dreams"

II. American stories

A. Oral traditions written to preserve

1. Native American

2. Hispanic

3. Irving's New York Dutch (satire)

B. "New" American traditions created from old

1. Irving

2. Cooper

C. Romanticism emerges

1. Cooper

a. Ideal hero

b. Nature

2. Irving

a. Role of nature

b. Truth of "dream" (American Revolution)

III. American Romantic fiction

A. Poe's Career (Westminster Church Hall and Burying
Grounds)

1. Varied success

2. Extensive influence

3. Current subjects

B. Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher"

1. Motifs

a. Dark mood

b. Premature burial

c. Family influence ("House")

d. Overwhelming fear

2. Narrator

3. Romanticism

a. Gothic subject

b. Limits of reason ("dreams")

4. Unified effect

C. Hawthorne's importance

D. Hawthorne's "Young Goodman Brown"

1. Use of past (Puritan setting and ideas)

2. Symbolism (Puritan and Romantic)

3. Ambiguity (dream or true)

IV. America and Dreams

A. Stories of journey to new understandings

B. Cultural myths

C. Uncertainty of "dream" of truth

D. American questioning